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Tytuł pozycji:

Escaping the evolutionary trap: Can size-related contest advantage compensate for juvenile mortality disadvantage when parasitoids develop in unnatural invasive hosts?

Tytuł:
Escaping the evolutionary trap: Can size-related contest advantage compensate for juvenile mortality disadvantage when parasitoids develop in unnatural invasive hosts?
Autorzy:
Mesterton-Gibbons M; Department of Mathematics, Florida State University, 1017 Academic Way, Tallahassee, Florida 32306-4510, USA. Electronic address: .
Cusumano A; Department of Agricultural, Food And Forest Sciences (SAAF), University of Palermo, Viale delle Scienze, 90128 Palermo, Italy. Electronic address: .
Hardy ICW; Department of Agricultural Sciences, University of Helsinki, P.O. Box 27 (Latokartanonkaari 5), FI-00014, Finland. Electronic address: .
Źródło:
Journal of theoretical biology [J Theor Biol] 2021 Oct 21; Vol. 527, pp. 110821. Date of Electronic Publication: 2021 Jun 29.
Typ publikacji:
Journal Article
Język:
English
Imprint Name(s):
Publication: Amsterdam : Elsevier
Original Publication: London.
MeSH Terms:
Heteroptera*
Wasps*
Animals ; Biological Evolution ; Europe ; Female ; Reproduction
Contributed Indexing:
Keywords: Brown Marmorated Stink Bug; Evolutionarily stable strategy; Halyomorpha halys; Host species; Ownership advantage; Reproductive value; Size advantage; Trissolcus basalis
Entry Date(s):
Date Created: 20210702 Date Completed: 20210809 Latest Revision: 20210809
Update Code:
20240104
DOI:
10.1016/j.jtbi.2021.110821
PMID:
34214568
Czasopismo naukowe
The quality of hosts for a parasitoid wasp may be influenced by attributes such as host size or species, with high quality for successful development usually coincident with high quality for larger offspring. This is not always the case: for the Scelionid wasp Trissolcus basalis, oviposition in eggs of the Brown Marmorated Stink Bug, Halyomorpha halys, rather than of the normal host, the Southern Green Stink Bug, Nezara viridula, leads to lower offspring survival, but survivors can be unusually large. Adult female T. basalis engage in contests for host access. As larger contestants are typically favoured in contests between parasitoids, the larger size of surviving offspring may compensate for the mortality of others. We construct a general game-theoretic model to explore whether size advantage can sustain a maternal preference to utilize a more deadly host species. We find that size advantage alone is unlikely to sustain a shift in host preference, yet such an outcome is possible when size asymmetries act simultaneously with advantages in host possession (ownership effect). Halyomorpha halys is an invasive pest of major agro-economic importance in Europe and the Americas, and use of its eggs as hosts by native parasitoids such as T. basalis has been seen as an evolutionary trap due to their high developmental mortality. Our model suggests that the recently discovered effect of host choice on offspring size may provide an escape from the trap via effects on contest biology of T. basalis which could foster a more stable association with H. halys. An evolutionary shift in the reproductive value of H. halys could increase the efficiency of T. basalis as a biological control agent of this invasive stink bug pest.
(Copyright © 2021 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)

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